County elections supervisors are up for pay raises, while penalties increase for trafficking in the modern version of food stamps and for stealing credit-card information at gas pumps, under new laws that go into effect Saturday.

Those changes to state laws are among 26 that take effect this weekend after being crafted during the 2016 legislative session. Lawmakers sent 272 bills to Gov. Rick Scott from the regular legislative session, which ended in March. Scott vetoed three and signed the rest.

The majority of the new laws, including the state’s annual budget, went into effect July 1 or immediately upon receiving Scott’s signature.

Here are some of the laws that will take effect Saturday:

SUPERVISORS PAY

— SB 514, which adjusts salaries for county supervisors of elections to be calculated the same as for clerks of circuit court, property appraisers and tax collectors. The Legislature’s Office of Economic and Demographic Research has indicated the change will result in $1.2 million in salary increases, which averages to an $18,540 increase per county.

That’s almost the exact amount that will apply in Flagler County: $18,408, making Supervisor of Elections Kaiti Lenhart’s salary–currently 98,766–the same as that of Clerk of Court Gail Wadsworth, Tax Collector Suzanne Johnston and Property Appraiser Jay Gardner: $117,174.

The last time the formula setting supervisors’ salaries was changed goes back to 1988. The formula is set by the state, but the money is paid out of local tax dollars, out of the budgets of each of the constitutional offices. Each constitutional officer is eligible for an additional $2,000 per year if that officer meets the certification requirement applicable to the office.

The Flagler County sheriff is still the highest-paid constitutional officer, with an annual salary of 126,123. County commissioners are paid $51,000, school board members are paid $32,000.

HOUSE ARREST

— HB 75, which expands rules regarding electronic monitoring devices. The measure makes it a third-degree felony to ask another person to remove or help circumvent the operation of a monitoring device.

EBT CARDS

— SB 218, which is aimed at reducing trafficking in electronic-benefit transfer cards. The cards, commonly known as EBT cards, are a higher-tech form of food stamps and help provide food assistance to low-income Floridians. The measure, in part, would make it a first-degree misdemeanor to have two or more EBT cards and sell or attempt to sell one of the cards. A second offense would be a third-degree felony.

DISABILITIES PROTECTION

— HB 387, which is named “Carl’s Law” and increases civil and criminal penalties when victims are people with disabilities. Carl Stark, a 36-year-old autistic man from St. Augustine was shot and killed in 2015 after being targeted by teenagers looking to steal a car.

THREATS

— SB 436, which makes it a second-degree felony for making false reports about using firearms in a violent manner. The law also makes it a first-degree misdemeanor to threaten with death or serious harm a law-enforcement officer, state attorney or assistant state attorney, firefighter, judge, elected official or any of their family members.

HUMAN TRAFFICKING

— HB 545, which prohibits people under 18 from being prosecuted for prostitution and makes clear that sexually exploiting a child in prostitution should be viewed as human trafficking. The measure also increases the penalty for people who knowingly rent space used for prostitution.

ELECTRONIC SKIMMERS

— SB 912, which is part of a crackdown on illegal electronic skimmers that have been found on gas pumps and ATM machines. The measure, backed by Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam, increases the penalties for people who possess counterfeit credit-card information. The proposal also includes requirements for gas-station owners and managers to use security measures on self-service fuel pumps.

SPINY LOBSTERS

— SB 1470, which revises rules dealing with stone-crab traps and spiny-lobster traps. In part, the law makes clear that a person with fewer than 100 undersized spiny lobsters may face a misdemeanor violation for each of the undersized crustaceans. Possessing more than 100 undersized spiny lobsters is a third degree felony offense.

OFFICIAL CORRUPTION

— HB 7071, which is intended to ease the legal threshold to prosecute officials involved in public corruption. Rather than proving an official acted “with corrupt intent,” prosecutors will need to show the person “knowingly and intentionally” engaged in the corrupt act.

I believe that the current SOE’S pay is plenty enough without the additional $18,900 that will only be added to increase our taxes. Think about how much the typical worker pay is in FL in comparison!. These administrative pays are totally out of context with the reality here. What about stop wasting our taxes on the top administrators and benefiting developers and invest more in improving our infrastructure while creating more jobs and also resolving the homeless situation residing in our woods?

I hope that everybody concerned about this is voting, because what I am seeing is the continued reelection of those raising government salaries and doing NOTHING for families.

This is what happens when you don’t vote. You get the kind of government you deserve. It takes full participation to change this and from what I’m seeing in Flagler County, MOST won’t bother to vote. Those who do vote keep reelecting the same people while expecting different results. Go figure. Easier to just complain, I guess.

I know Adam Morley our native Democrat running for office is against this waste raises sure! These raises were proposed by your majority GOP legislators in Tallahassee and signed by your also GOP Governor Rick Scott so who are we kidding here defending them now?